Jewelry designer Amanda Keidan: a house that sparkles

CaptionLounging

Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

Amanda Keidan relaxes with her dogs, Woodruff and William, in the living room. Vintage glass jars and bottles from flea markets sparkle like delicate jewels on the mantel underneath a mirror from Serena & Lily.

Amanda Keidan relaxes with her dogs, Woodruff and William, in the living room. Vintage glass jars and bottles from flea markets sparkle like delicate jewels on the mantel underneath a mirror from Serena & Lily. (Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)

Keidan with William, a rescue dog. Keidan has been collecting portraits of rescued animals for the forthcoming coffee table book "I Was Found at the Pound." She said the book is an effort to dispel the notion that only "unlovable, anxiety-ridden animals" are available at shelters and through rescue groups.

Keidan with William, a rescue dog. Keidan has been collecting portraits of rescued animals for the forthcoming coffee table book "I Was Found at the Pound." She said the book is an effort to dispel the notion that only "unlovable, anxiety-ridden animals" are available at shelters and through rescue groups. (Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)

As a designer of custom jewelry, Amanda Keidan sometimes takes delicate vintage pieces and reworks them into intricately sculptured, modern collections.

The same could be said for her sunny, art-filled Venice home, where gold accents blend with sparkling glass, and vintage barrel chairs share the living room floor with new Ikea ottomans and a cool lamp bought off the flash sales site Gilt.

Keidan’s passion for art is not surprising given her background: Her great-grandfather was renowned pianist Leopold Godowsky. Her grandparents were Leopold Godowsky Jr., a violinist and co-inventor of Kodachrome film, and Frances Gershwin Godowsky, sister to composers George and Ira. The multitude of artworks throughout Keidan’s house creates an ambience that is elegant yet whimsical — and deeply personal.

“I love that there is a story behind each artwork,” she said. “It’s as though my friends and family have left thumbprints on my home.”

She purchased the three-bedroom, two-bath house last year after looking at more than 100 properties in the last four years. She had, she said, given up when she visited the Venice house ,where friends from London had been staying. “It was a little like the cliche you often hear about falling in love,” she said, laughing. “Stop looking and you will find it.”

After convincing the owner to sell, Keidan embarked on a four-month renovation to give the 1947 home a cleaner look.

“I wanted it to be light and airy and cheerful,” she said.

Mustard and red accent walls were painted museum white and soothing neutral tones. The exterior went from dark blue to more white. New windows were installed to bring in natural light, and new landscaping made the most of outdoor spaces, too. Small fixes, such as smoothing the home’s warped walls, helped to achieve the clean-lined look Keidan wanted. And though much changed, Keidan was careful to keep what worked: the original floor plan and striking leaded glass windows that Keidan said were from the old Helms Bakery on the L.A.-Culver City border.

For Keidan, who grew up in New York, the result is much like the Venice community she has grown to love: an eclectic space that doesn’t conform to one particular style — just like her jewelry. “I tell my friends to start with pieces they love,” she said. “And go from there.”

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